The DeepCool Build That Proved I Can Make Hardware Content Feel Normal

In April 2022, DeepCool sent me a bunch of parts and I did what makes the most sense for PC content. I built a computer with them. The package was stacked: AK400, PQ850M, MF120GT fans, and the AK560. Instead of trying to force a long “review,” I made it real and visual, the parts went straight into the build.

The first video was basically me showing the parts and building, and it hit around 5.9K views. I’m not going to pretend it was some crazy cinematic thing, it was simple build content. That is also why it works on TikTok, people like watching progress and assembly. It feels satisfying, and it proves you actually touch the hardware instead of holding a box and reading specs.

Then I posted another video in the same month showing off the specs of the computer build I did with the parts. That second piece matters because it adds context. A build video gets attention, a specs video pulls the people who care about what it actually is. Together, it makes the content feel complete instead of “here’s a box, next.”

DeepCool is also one of those brands where trust is the product. Nobody buys a cooler or PSU because a creator says “it’s insane.” They buy it because the brand feels reliable and the build looks clean. Showing it installed and part of a working system is the best pitch you can make without sounding like an ad.

This collab belongs in my portfolio because it shows how I integrate parts properly. I don’t need to overtalk it. I put the parts into a build, make the content watchable, and keep it honest. Two videos, real usage, and the brand gets real exposure in the exact context people care about.